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Acme

Acme is located northeast of Traverse City, along the eastern coast of Traverse Bay. This city is home to the Grand Traverse Resort and Spa; which includes an 18-hole championship golf course, and was the first Jack Nicklaus signature course in Michi...

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Alpena


Categories: Alpena


Bay City

Bay City is located near the Saginaw Bay on Lake Huron, and is a major entertainment and recreation center. Bay City was first settled by Leon Trombley in 1831, and quickly became a bustling community known for lumbering, milling and shipbuilding. Vi...

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Bay Harbor

Situated on five miles of Lake Michigan shoreline between Petoskey and Charlevoix, Bay Harbor encompasses a world class hotel, conference center, marina, equestrian facility, and golf. Bay Harbor offers unique and fun activities all year round, from ...

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Benton Harbor


Categories: Benton Harbor


Boyne City


Categories: Boyne City


Boyne Falls

Boyne Falls is a village in Michigan located on the Boyne River. Conveniently located nearby Boyne Mountain, a ski resort with 60 downhill runs and cross-country trails, snowshoeing and ice skating, Boyne Falls is the perfect place to stay for those ...

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Boyne Mountain

Boyne Mountain in Petoskey, Michigan is an excellent family resort, offering interchangeable tickets and programs with its nearby neighbor, Boyne Highlands. The first North American resort to install a six seater chair lift, Boyne Mountain's 41 runs ...

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Chippewa County


Categories: Chippewa County


Dearborn

Consider a city that is a world famous industrial center and the site of a multi-million-dollar commercial development. At the same time, it is one of America's leading tourist attractions, a college town, and the kind of residential community that w...

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Detroit

Detriot has historic landmarks, museums, sightseeing, shopping, and accommodations to fit every budget. It is filled with history, culture and modern sophistication all at the same time. The new casinos bring Las Vegas thrill, and the Great Lakes cat...

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Escanaba


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Frankenmuth

Frankenmuth, "Michigan's Little Bavaria", delights over 3 million visitors annually. Come experience the Bavarian heritage that attracts these visitors year after year.

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Grand Haven

Grand Haven, Michigan, is a beachtown and a renaissance city. It has become a beacon for those looking for simplicity in a scene of natural beauty. From its roots as a highly commercial port-of-call, Grand Haven has evolved to become a serene place, ...

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Grand Rapids

From the Great Lake to the Grand City, there's a world of pleasure awaiting you in Michigan's West Coast. A visit to Michigan's West Coast blends the best of the city with the beauty of the lakeshore. While in Grand Rapids, you can stroll the downtow...

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Harbor Springs


Categories: Harbor Springs


Holland, MI

Located 165 mi/265 km west of Detroit, on the shores of Lake Michigan, Holland—as you might expect from its name—makes much of its Dutch heritage: It was founded by immigrants from the Netherlands in 1847, and it continues many of the traditions of t...

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Houghton


Categories: Houghton


Isle Royale National Park

This remote island, which gets fewer visitors in a season than Yellowstone gets in a day, is recommended only to those who have flexible travel schedules. Situated far out in Lake Superior, 500 mi/805 km northwest of Detroit, it can only be reached b...

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Keweenaw Waterway


Categories: Keweenaw Waterway


Lake Michigan


Categories: Lake Michigan


Lansing


Categories: Lansing


Mackinac Island

Visit Mackinac Island and experience the sites and sounds of a bygone era. Located between Michigan's upper and lower peninsulas, the Island offers unforgettable natural and historical treasures surrounded by the sparkling blue waters of Lake Huron....

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Mackinaw City

Mackinaw City is a charming town on the Straits of Mackinac in Michigan.  More than a relaxing vacation spot visiting Mackinaw is a discovery, an education, and an adventure. Four National Historic Sites preserve the area’s ...

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Manistee

Manistee's newly constructed River Walk enables you to stroll at your leisure along the Manistee River as it passes quaint Victorian shops and a unique downtown area. There are golf courses galore for every level of player including world class Arcad...

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Marquette


Categories: Marquette


Midland


Categories: Midland


Music House Museum


Categories: Music House Museum


Muskegon


Categories: Muskegon


Northport

The village of Northport boasts a beautiful harbor, fine parks and excellent antique shopping for visitors to enjoy. The hills around Northport are filled with cherry and apple orchards. Leelanau State Park at the northern tip of the Leelanau Peninsu...

Categories: Northport


Pellston


Categories: Pellston


Petoskey

Perched on a bluff above Lake Michigan's Little Traverse Bay, 240 mi/385 km northwest of Detroit, Petoskey has long been a resort town: Many affluent Chicagoans passed their summers in the area at the turn of the century, among them the young Ernest ...

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Pictured Rocks National Lakeshore

Located near Munising in the Upper Peninsula, 330 mi/530 km northwest of Detroit, the Pictured Rocks Lakeshore is a remarkable landscape of high cliffs along Lake Superior that is unlike anything else in Michigan. The name comes from the rich colors...

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Porcupine Mountains State Park

At 60,000 acres/24,281 hectares, this park is one of the few remaining large wilderness areas in the Midwest. The state's Department of Natural Resources maintains more than 90 mi/145 km of foot trails, 16 rustic trailside cabins and many campsites i...

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Saugatuck


Categories: Saugatuck


Sault Ste. Marie

Welcome to the world of The Great Waters – Nature’s Adventure Where Huron, Michigan and Superior Meet. Where nature, culture, and history collide to create an extraordinary place of quiet woodlands, rushing waters, native arts, and the st...

Categories: Sault Ste. Marie


Sleeping Bear Dunes National Lakeshore

Sleeping Bear Dunes National Lakeshore encompasses a 35 mile stretch of Lake Michigan's eastern coastline, as well as North and South Manitou Islands. The park was established primarily for its outstanding natural features, including forests, beaches...

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Three Rivers


Categories: Three Rivers


Traverse City

Although it's known as the Cherry Capital of the World, Traverse City seems to do an even better job of growing motels, restaurants and other tourist-related sites: It's the center of the popular vacation destinations in the northwestern Lower Penins...

Categories: Traverse City


Water. It's the reason European explorers and fur traders arrived in Michigan long before they got to many other parts of the Midwest. With shoreline on four of the five Great Lakes, Michigan was directly on the canoe routes that were the superhighways of the 1600s.Free Michigan Vacation Package Quote


Michigan Travel Agents

Water is also the primary reason travelers go to Michigan today. The state has vast forests, stretches of farmland, large cities and small towns, but it is water that separates Michigan from the other states—both physically and in terms of vacation opportunities. In addition to being surrounded by the small "seas" of the Great Lakes, Michigan has 11,000 inland lakes. You'll have to travel to the Atlantic or Pacific oceans to find better conditions for boating, fishing, swimming or simply taking in the shoreline scenery. Even then, Michigan can hold its own: It has far more land along the big water than most states on the East or West Coast. We think some of its coastal areas (Grand Traverse Bay, Pictured Rocks, Sleeping Bear Dunes) rank among the most beautiful in the U.S.


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62-night Longitudinal World Cruise VII

Price: $47,995 - # of Days: 62 days

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68-night Longitudinal World Cruise VI

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11-night Cruising the Great Lakes: Chicago to Toronto Cruise/Land Package

Price: $13,790 - # of Days: 11 days

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11-night Cruising the Great Lakes: Toronto to Chicago Cruise/Land Package

Price: $13,790 - # of Days: 11 days

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7-night Niagara & The Great Lakes Cruise

Price: $6,995 - # of Days: 7 days

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Michigan


Water. It's the reason European explorers and fur traders arrived in Michigan long before they got to many other parts of the Midwest. With shoreline on four of the five Great Lakes, Michigan was directly on the canoe routes that were the superhighways of the 1600s.

Water is also the primary reason travelers go to Michigan today. The state has vast forests, stretches of farmland, large cities and small towns, but it is water that separates Michigan from the other states—both physically and in terms of vacation opportunities. In addition to being surrounded by the small "seas" of the Great Lakes, Michigan has 11,000 inland lakes. You'll have to travel to the Atlantic or Pacific oceans to find better conditions for boating, fishing, swimming or simply taking in the shoreline scenery. Even then, Michigan can hold its own: It has far more land along the big water than most states on the East or West Coast. We think some of its coastal areas (Grand Traverse Bay, Pictured Rocks, Sleeping Bear Dunes) rank among the most beautiful in the U.S.

Geography

Geographically, Michigan is made up of the Upper and Lower Peninsulas. The Lower Peninsula resembles a mitten in shape, and its landscape ranges from virtually flat (the Saginaw River Valley) to large hills (in the northwest). The majority of the state's inland lakes are in the Lower Peninsula. The Upper Peninsula—or "U.P.," as it's called—is made up of forest and wetland areas, with rocky cliffs along parts of the Lake Superior shore and the Porcupine Mountains rising in the far west.

History

Michigan can thank the glaciers of the Ice Age for the Great Lakes: After the ice retreated, great water-filled basins were left in their wake. Native Americans moved into the region after the glaciers were gone, and the Old Copper Culture—named for the metal the people mined in Michigan's Upper Peninsula—began about 4000 BC. At the time of European contact, the principal tribes were the Ottawa, Ojibwa and Potawatomi. They lived in small bands and depended largely on hunting and fishing, though some agriculture was practiced in the southern part of the state.

After the French arrived (Etienne Brule was the first to see Michigan in about 1618), the area became important in the fur trade. The British won control of the area in 1763, but their presence was short-lived. The land that was to become Michigan supposedly passed to the U.S. in 1783, at the close of the Revolutionary War. The British held on to forts at Detroit and Mackinac until 1796, however, and retook both during the War of 1812. In 1813, Michigan came permanently under U.S. control. At that time, forests blanketed almost the entire state.

With the opening of the Erie Canal in New York in 1825, settlers began to move into the region in great numbers. After entering the Union as a free state in 1837, Michigan rapidly began to exploit its plentiful natural resources, especially timber and minerals. Jobs attracted waves of immigrants (first Germans, then Dutch, Irish, Swedes, Finns, Norwegians, Italians and Canadians). Toward the turn of the century, wealthy families from Detroit and Chicago began to vacation along the shores of Lake Michigan and on Mackinac Island—areas that are still popular travel destinations.

The shift from horse-drawn to horseless transportation is what made Michigan into a powerhouse of manufacturing. In the late 1800s, the state had a thriving carriage industry, and this know-how quickly put it in the forefront of the automobile revolution, with Henry Ford and R.E. Olds leading the way. As the car factories boomed, both black and white workers migrated from the South to fill jobs on the production lines.

With the auto industry at its core, Michigan has become an industrial center crucial to the U.S. economy. The state's dependence on automobiles and heavy industry has had its drawbacks, however: Many factories closed in the late 1970s and early 1980s, throwing people out of work. In recent years, Michigan's businesses have become more diversified, and the unemployment rate has dropped.

Michigan, especially around the Ann Arbor area, is turning itself into a technology corridor. Many of the state's universities, especially the University of Michigan, have become front-runners of the Midwest for technological research and development. Private industry in the same arena, especially biotechnology and nanotechnology, has grown in the state. Although not on par with the likes of Silicon Valley or MIT, Michigan is remaking itself as a bastion of research, invention and application of the advanced technological landscape.

Snapshot

Michigan's main attractions include the Great Lakes, Mackinac Island, Sleeping Bear Dunes, Detroit, outdoor activities (golf, hunting, waterskiing, snow skiing, hiking, sailing, canoeing, lake and river fishing, camping), waterfalls, Isle Royale National Park, the Upper Peninsula, Traverse City and gambling.

Most travelers will find something of interest in Michigan. If you're going primarily to enjoy the Great Lakes, expect chilly water temperatures even in midsummer.

Potpourri

There's a bit of friction between the residents of Michigan's two peninsulas. Those from the Upper Peninsula are often branded as "yoopers" (U.P.-ers) by those from the Lower Peninsula and are often made the butt of jokes. For their part, U.P. residents sometimes talk of forming their own state, feeling rather neglected by the populous parts of southern Michigan.

According to a Native American legend, a mother bear and two cubs swam across Lake Michigan to flee a forest fire in Wisconsin. The mother arrived safely on the far shore, but the two cubs drowned. The Great Spirit transformed the cubs into the Manitou Islands, and the mother bear became the Sleeping Bear Dunes.

The Potawatomi people of Michigan decorated their hair, clothing, body, bark wigwams and goods with paint, copper and shell ornaments. They obtained copper from the shores of Lake Superior, but the seashells came all the way from the Atlantic Coast.

With 11,000 lakes and 36,000 mi/57,600 km of rivers and streams, Michigan is a great place to fish: Among the quarry are trout, perch and coho salmon.

The Mackinac Bridge, which connects the Lower and Upper peninsulas, is 5 mi/8 km in length and one of the longest suspension bridges in the world. On Labor Day, the governor leads a walk across the bridge to salute the state's labor roots.

More than 100 lighthouses dot the Michigan coastline.

Dee Stadium in Houghton is the birthplace of professional hockey. The first organized pro hockey league played there in 1904.

The Detroit-Windsor Tunnel was the world's first international underwater vehicular tunnel. It opened in 1930.

After two successful "moose lifts" from Canada, more than 200 of the antlered giants now roam their ancestral home in the Huron Mountains in the Upper Peninsula.

The state is renowned for its autumn foliage. In late September or early October, Northern Michigan and the Upper Peninsula transform into a spectacular tapestry of oranges, reds, yellows and golds. Locals plan their weekends—and often their weddings—around the splendor of this display.




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